Prosperity Quotes
Discover the best quotes about Prosperity. This collection showcases wisdom and insights on Prosperity from various authors and personalities.
A great teacher not only teaches, they cultivate green fields to grow beautiful flowers to spread the fragrance of peace, happiness, and prosperity.
Ultimate prosperity is one's value within. It takes a man of depth, morality, and charm to be envied yet without a sign of wealth or romance. A passion to prove such inner worth is his permission to achieve whatever he desires.
As many suffer from too much as too little.
Prosperity doth bewitch men, seeming clear; But seas do laugh, show white, when rocks are near.
When you ascend the hill of prosperity, may you not meet a friend.
Few of us can stand prosperity. Another man's, I mean.
Prosperity's the very bond of love, Whose fresh complexion and whose heart together Affliction alters.
We have produced a world of contented bodies and discontented minds.
I should like to bring a case to trial: Prosperity versus Beauty, Cash registers teetering in a balance against the comfort of the soul.
Prosperity is the touchstone of virtue; for it is less difficult to bear misfortunes than to remain uncorrupted by pleasure.
Social prosperity means man happy, the citizen free, the nation great.
It is the curse of prosperity that it takes work away from us, and shuts that door to hope and health of spirit.
The human race has had long experience and a fine tradition in surviving adversity. But we now face a task for which we have little experience, the task of surviving prosperity.
Hardship is vanishing, but so is style, and the two are more closely connected than the present generation supposes.
Some men never find prosperity, For all their voyaging, While others find it with no voyaging.
The taste for well-being is the prominent and indelible feature of democratic times.
Prosperity is only an instrument to be used, not a deity to be worshiped.
If prosperity is regarded as the reward of virtue it will be regarded as the symptom of virtue.
Happiness seems to require a modicum of external prosperity.
They who prosper take on airs of vanity.